President Abdelaziz Bouteflika announced three days of national mourning to begin tomorrow, praising the soldiers who perished in the crash as “martyrs.”

A MILITARY AIRCRAFT carrying 78 people crashed in Algeria’s mountainous northeast with just one survivor today, in one of the country’s deadliest air disasters, the defence ministry said.

The C-130 Hercules aircraft, which came down in the Oum El Bouaghi region, was carrying 74 passengers – soldiers and their families – as well as four crew members, the ministry said.

The figure was far lower than the 103 people originally reported to be travelling on the C-130 Hercules transport aircraft by security sources and state media.

The ministry gave no immediate explanation for the discrepancy.

By early evening the emergency services had recovered 76 bodies from the crash site, including the remains of four women.

The sole survivor was taken to a military hospital in the flight’s intended destination, the city of Constantine, east of the capital, suffering from head trauma, public radio reported.

(Image: Mohamed Ali/AP/PA)

‘Martyrs’

President Abdelaziz Bouteflika announced three days of national mourning to begin tomorrow, praising the soldiers who perished in the crash as “martyrs.”

The plane was flying from the desert garrison town of Tamanrasset in Algeria’s deep south to Constantine, 320 kilometres (200 miles) east of Algiers, and lost contact with the control tower just as it was beginning its descent.

The aircraft slammed into Mount Fertas in the Oum El Bouaghi region at around midday local time, state media quoted army spokesman Colonel Bouguern as saying.

Nearly 250 emergency personnel were deployed to the crash site despite the difficulties caused by the mountainous terrain and wintry conditions, the ministry added.

The recovery teams located one of the aircraft’s two black box flight recorders, Algerian newspaper El Watan reported on its website.

Tamanrasset, where the flight had departed from, lies in the far south of Algeria, near the border with Mali, and is the main base for the country’s southern military operations.

Extra troops and equipment have been stationed there in recent months as part of efforts to beef up surveillance of Algeria’s frontiers with Mali and Libya, following a deadly hostage-taking by Islamist militants at a desert gas plant in January last year.

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